203 A.D. 829 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
The plaintiffs are brokers. They wanted a messenger to carry stocks and bonds from their house to other brokers. They had in their office a call box of the defendant, but, instead of using that call box, for some reason unexplained they went out into the hall of their building and saw the Western Union operator and told her they wanted a messenger, a bond and stock runner, which apparently meant a messenger to carry bonds and stocks. The Western Union is not shown to have had any financial interest in the defend
In Hirsch v. American District Telegraph Co. (112 App. Div. 265) it was held that “ an incorporated telegraph company maintaining lines in a city by which to communicate with police stations, and which, in addition, maintains a staff of messenger boys which it furnishes to its patrons at a charge based upon the time employed, but which is not incorporated to carry or deliver property, and does not assume to do so, is not a common carrier, and is not liable as such for money intrusted to a messenger and stolen by him.” Further it was held: “ Under a complaint alleging an express contract by such company to carry and deliver an envelope containing money, there can be a recovery only when such express contract is established, and a recovery cannot be based upon the theory that the defendant is hable for the misfeasance or malfeasance of the messenger.” Further it was held that “An express contract to carry is not established by mere evidence that the defendant’s manager was told of the contents of the envelope, when it is shown that the owner of the money never delivered the envelope to the manager, but after refusing several messengers selected one and delivered the envelope to him in the presence of the manager, and personally gave directions to the messenger as to the carriage and delivery of the envelope.”
In that case, while the messenger was selected by the person for whom the money was carried, he was selected from among the messengers in the employ of the defendant’s company. The fact in this case that the messenger service was paid for at the uniform rate of thirty cents an hour seems to me clearly to establish that it was not intended by the defendant to assume liability for the conversion of stocks and bonds and moneys delivered to a' messenger boy. If any such liability had been intended to be assumed, it seems very clear that a greater compensation would be asked, a compensation commensurate with the responsibility which the defendant was undertaking for the conversion by its servant.
There are several rulings of the trial court, of which complaint is made, which would require at least a reversal and a new trial of this action. The charge of the court as to the duty of the defendant in looking up the criminal record of this messenger and as to the indictments, or rather, the refusal to charge as requested, places the defendant before the jury as having failed to look up the criminal record of a man who went by another name, which fact was unknown to the defendant. The refusal to charge that this girl at the Western Union office was not the agent of the defendant was clearly error, for which a new trial should be granted. Attention to. the implied
The judgment and order should, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., and Greenbaum, J., concur; Dowling and Page, JJ., dissent.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.